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TREASURY DEPARTMENT 


Washington 
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE, ee Press Service 
Monday, July 23, 1945. No. V-1 


The United States Mint continued to establish new records for 
coinage during the past fiscal year, the Treasury announced today. 


Nellie Tayloe Ross, Director of the Mint, reported that for 
the twelve months ending June 30, the three coinage institutions 
turned out an average of 46 tons of money a day, for a total of 
2,646,134,101 pieces of domestic issue, and 1,388,971,000 pieces 
for eleven friendly foreign governments. The total number of 
pieces struck, domestic and foreign, was 4,035,105,101. The value 
of domestic coinage was $124, 754,925.25, also the highest on record. 


For the fiscal year ended June 30, 1944, the total of domestic 
coinage was 2,578,640,270 pieces with face value of (L109, 464,836.70. 
Coinage, domestic and foreign, totalled 3,066,487,270 pieces that 
year. 


The steady expansion in demand for the nation's coins is a 
result primarily of the wartime tempo of business. Mint institu- 
tions worked 24 hours a day, seven days a week last year to keep 
abreast of needs. ; 


Nearly two billion pieces of the 1945 production were in the 
ever-busy l-cent denomination. Approximately 63,000,000 half 
dollars, 126,000,000 quarter dollars, 342,000,000 10-cent pieces, 
and 156,000,000 5-cent coins were turned out. 


Coinage orders were executed for Australia, Dominican Republic, 
El Salvador, Ethiopia, Greenland, Guatemala, Netherlands, Peru, 
Philippine Islands, Saudi Arabia, and Venezuela. 


Currently, Mint experts are working on plans for a new 10-cent 
piece commemorating the late President Franklin D. Roosevelt, which 
will go into circulation early next year. The designs are being 
made by John R. Sinnock, 57 year old chief engraver, who also 
designed the Purple Heart medal, considered by many to be the most 
beautiful of the awards to the nation's war heroes. Mr. Sinnock, 
designer of a number of medals of the presidential and other series, 
is considered one of the world's great artists in this highly 
Specialized field, and has won many national and international 
awards. 


Mint production of medals for the Army, Navy, Marine Corps and 
Coast Guard is itself big business, currently employing substantial 
personnel and operating on a 24 hour a day basis. 











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Mint designers also are preparing for production and early 
offering to the public of a memorial medal honoring Mr. Roosevelt, 
and an inaugural medal bearing the likeness of President Truman, 
fulfilling a tradition that dates back to George Washington. 
Traditional, also, are medals bearing the likenesses of Secretaries 
of the Treasury; and Secretary Vinson will be so honored. 


The memorial medal for Franklin D. Roosevelt will, on its fa 
bear his likeness; and on the reverse carries a design of a seate 
figure, palm branch in hand, in a pose suggestive of mourning ib 
will be produced at the Philadelphia Mint. 


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